DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – Tony Stewart will start from a familiar spot tonight at Daytona International Speedway.
The Sprint Cup points leader was awarded the pole for the Coke Zero 400 when rain washed out qualifying Friday.
It was Stewarts third pole – all in rainouts – in the last five races. He also started up front at Pocono last month and New Hampshire last week.
It really doesnt matter anyway, he said. In a Cup race, if your car is good enough to get to the front, you can do it from dead last, so it really doesnt matter if you start from the pole or not. The advantage is it gives us a good pit selection. Thats what helps. Other than that, its really not an issue.
Starting from the front has proved beneficial for Stewart, though. His first points-race win as a driver/car owner came at Pocono, and he finished fifth at New Hampshire. His only Daytona pole came in July 2005, when he won his first race at NASCARs most famous track.
Jeff Gordon, Jimmie Johnson, Kurt Busch, Carl Edwards and Denny Hamlin rounded out the first three rows.
Max Papis and Mike Wallace were sent home, unable to attempt to get into the 43-car field. Wallace was scheduled to drive the No. 64 car, the one some believed recently reinstated driver Jeremy Mayfield would try to get into to make his return from a drug suspension.
Car owner Larry Gunselman, citing sponsorship concerns, declined to offer Mayfield a ride.
The field was set by owners points for the fourth time this season. Qualifying at Martinsville in March also was rained out.
Brad Keselowski, Scott Speed, David Gilliland, Joe Nemechek, Dave Blaney, Patrick Carpentier, Tony Raines and Regan Smith were the beneficiaries of the rain. They all earned automatic starting spots instead of having to qualify on speed.
Greg Biffle and Sam Hornish Jr. will have to start from the back of the field. They were involved in a crash during practice Thursday night, forcing both into backup cars.
Dale Earnhardt Jr., winless in 38 races, heads into tonights race ranked 19th in the standings and still adjusting to a crew chief change six weeks ago that brought an emotional end to his long working relationship with cousin Tony Eury Jr.
As Earnhardts struggles snowballed through April and May, it affected everyone in the tight-knit Earnhardt and Eury families.
I cant have another year like this. I cant mentally. I cant physically. I dont want to put the people around me through this, Earnhardt said.
When we were really, really struggling, everybody in the family was upset. Crying and carrying on. All the women were crying, the men were cussing. Im serious. This is our family, Eurys and Earnhardts, racing is our life and it wears on all of them. We cant put anybody through this (stuff) again. Weve got to get this right.
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